ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2001: Tolstoy's view of art is discussed in most courses in aesthetics, particularly his main text What is Art? He believed that the importance of art lies not in its purely aesthetic qualities but in its connection with life, and that art becomes decadent where this connection is lost. This view has often been misconceived and its strength overlooked. This book presents a clear exposition of Tolstoy's What is Art?, highlighting the value and importance of Tolstoy's views in relation to aesthetics. Mounce considers the problems which exercised Tolstoy and explains their fundamental importance in contemporary disputes. Having viewed these problems of aesthetics as they arise in a classic work, Howard Mounce affords readers fresh insights not simply into the problems of aesthetics themselves, but also into their contemporary treatment. Students and interested readers of aesthetics and philosophy, as well as those exploring the works of Tolstoy in literature, will find this book of particular interest and will discover that reading What is Art? with attention, affords something of the excitement found in removing the grime from an oil painting - gradually from underneath there appears an authentic masterpiece.

chapter Chapter One|12 pages

The Background

chapter Chapter Two|5 pages

Art and Society

chapter Chapter Three|6 pages

The Problem

chapter Chapter Four|5 pages

The Central Features

chapter Chapter Five|5 pages

Art and Morality

chapter Chapter Six|6 pages

Art in History

chapter Chapter Seven|9 pages

Decadent Art

chapter Chapter Eight|16 pages

Wagner

chapter Chapter Nine|11 pages

Summary and Elaboration

chapter Chapter Ten|18 pages

Alternative Theories

chapter Chapter Eleven|14 pages

Shakespeare